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This story is part of continuing coverage of South Carolina's looming eviction crisis as the CDC moratorium winds down.
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In the final installment of our four-part look at the state of nursing one year after the COVID pandemic began, South Carolina Public Radio asks what role social media, healthcare agencies, and the press had in shaping what you thought (and maybe still think) the pandemic was really like for emergency care workers.
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In Part 3 of South Carolina Public Radio's four-part look at the state of the nursing profession, those tasked with keeping and recruiting nurses say the COVID-19 pandemic gave hospitals and schools an awful lot to learn — chief of which is to build support and safety nets right into the programs that help nurses survive emotionally.
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Dr. Melissa Nolan and her crew of student tick hunters found thousands (and thousands) of ticks all over South Carolina last year. It was the first real effort in the state to catalog which species are here and which we need to be most concerned about.
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When bridges get their weight limits dropped, emergency crews need to take notice. That’s particularly true with fire companies.“Our ladder truck weighs…
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It’s been a bad year. You lost a lot of work because of the pandemic. You haven’t been able to pay the rent in months. And now your landlord tells you…
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For ways you can help, scroll down to the bottom of this story.On the upside, South Carolina is a bounteous food state. We grow almost 5 million acres…
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In the beginning, when everyone got sent home to ride out the coronavirus pandemic, Pickens County didn’t have much to worry about. Its COVID numbers were…
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The African-American community’s best and most trusted resource is often itself.When it comes to the COVID-19 vaccine, that can actually be a problem.“We…